Polonaises, mazurkas, and waltzes
Polonaises, mazurkas, and waltzes are what usually comes to mind when you hear the name Chopin. The composer spent almost all of his 30-year long artistic career writing dance-inspired pieces, they constitute the latest part of his oeuvre, and are the reason why he is
considered a quintessentially Polish composer rather than his other splendid works.
Ballet music is, nevertheless, entirely absent from his oeuvre. Performance dance was not of interest to serious musicians in the first half of the 19th century. Chopin did attend ballet performances – after all, dance scenes were included in some operas, a genre he greatly enjoyed. His extant letters reveal that he watched nascent ballets in Vienna and Paris. No wonder: he tried to be an active participant in the life of the European high society.
Chopiniana (2017) by Photo: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
Fryderyk Chopin continues to inspire
Countless choreographers, visual artists, film makers, and musicians have drawn on the work of this brilliant artist.
The most famous choreography set to the Polish composer’s music is the neo-romantic Chopiniana devised by Mikhail Fokine. Written over a hundred years ago in 1907, it is the most poetic ballet in history.
Chopiniana / Bolero / Chroma - trailer (2017) by Video credits: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
Often staged as Les Syphides,
the piece is full of mesmerisingly beautiful harmonious movement with numerous arabesques as the lead motif.
Chopiniana (2017) by Photo: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
Devoid of a plot, Chopiniana is considered the first abstract ballet. It is linked together by the character of the poet, a young man surrounded by the floaty dance of the sylphs.
Although in the early 20th century setting dance to Chopin music was almost considered as a sacrilege, Fokine’s finely tuned interpretation of Polonaise in A major, Nocturne in A-flat major, Prelude in A major, and Grand Valse Brillante in E-flat major won the most hardened hearts.
Chopiniana (2017) by Photo: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
Today, ballet companies still consider it as an ultimate test of artistic proficiency.
Chopin lived in the apogee of the
golden era of European culture. The oversensitive artist was driven by music as well as the premonition of death. He was both proud and shy by disposition, a genius who craved to live among the rich and beautiful.
Chopin the Romantic Artist (2010) by Designed by Adam ŻebrowskiTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
Chopin the Romantic Artist
To remind everyone what a remarkable individual he was and mark the bicentenary of his birth (2010), the Polish National Opera commissioned an unusual – biographical – ballet Chopin the Romantic Artist, which recalls some of the most emotional moments of the composer’s life.
Chopin the Romantic Artist (2010) by Photo: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
The difficult task of expressing Chopin’s feelings through dance and choreography was entrusted to France’s Patrice Bart while the libretto was co-written by Antoni Libera.
The score – apart from Chopin’s own pieces – includes works by his contemporaries: Hector Berlioz, Manuel de Falla, Sergei Lyapunov, Franz Liszt, Franz Schubert, and Robert Schumann.
Scene after scene, the ballet takes you through important events in Chopin’s biography told in the expressive language of the human body: childhood play in his homeland, the Duchy of Warsaw, love for his mother, patriotic sentiments, travels, triumphs in the salons of Paris, love, tragic illness, and death.
Chopin the Romantic Artist (2010) by Designed by: Luisa SpinatelliTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
The Lady of the Camellias
by the world-renowned John Neumeier is undoubtedly one of the most ravishing ballet adaptations of Chopin music.
The Lady of the Camellias - trailer (2018) by Video credits: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
The story draws on the novel by Alexandre Dumas (fils). The titular courtesan lived in Paris in Chopin’s times. Did he meet her? We do not know. The woman famously memorialised in opera (Verdi’s La traviata), theatre, and film excited the imagination of her contemporaries, so he must have known about her existence.
Marie Duplessis –
because this was her actual name – captured Dumas’s heart. Deeply in love, he demanded that she quit her profession for him. Yet, La Divine Marie, as her Parisian admirers called her, did not want to give up her luxurious lifestyle. She soon died of tuberculosis.
Devised for the Stuttgart Ballet in 1978,
the choreography is evidence of Neumeier’s extraordinary artistic sensitivity. He managed to render a whole spectrum of passions and desires with a score centred around Largo from Chopin’s Sonata in B minor.
The piece
resounds with the sadness caused by the composer’s illness and the joy and frivolity of the Parisian social circles – both motifs corresponding with the tragic story of Marguerite Gautier.
The Lady of the Camellias - rehearsal (2018) by Photo: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
The famous choreography
has to date entered the repertoire of just a few companies in the world. It is a classic par excellence, a piece deeply set in the language of traditional ballet.
The score also features Waltzes in A-flat major and F major, a few Preludes, Ballade in G minor, and Chopin’s piano concertos. The last-mentioned have inspired a few other choreographers working on the Polish scene.
Notre Chopin
is a double bill of ballets devised to mark 100 years since Poland recovered its independence (2018).
Two extraordinary yet very different choreographers – Liam Scarlett and Krzysztof Pastor – used the agency of Chopin music to look at Poland from the 21st-century perspective.
Notre Chopin - trailer (2018) by Video credits: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
When setting dance
to Concerto in E minor, Britain’s Liam Scarlett did not want to focus on a specific narrative or story but the emotions associated with celebrating independence and freedom.
Concerto in E minor (2018) by Photo: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
Listening to Chopin's music, he carefully analyzed its structure and translated it into movement.
Concerto in F minor (2018) by Photo: Ewa KrasuckaTeatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
Danced to Concerto in F minor,
Krzysztof Pastor's jubilee choreography explores Polishness, patriotism, and history. It is set during different time periods symbolised by four colours.
The costumes and sets come in: white – representing idealism, purity, and faith; red – the colour seen in the Polish flag as well as the symbol of communism or socialism; black – which has had various significations in Polish history, including nationalist ones; and finally – golden – which stands for carefreeness, consumerism, glitz, and lack of ideological content.
Chopin’s music has put down roots on the ballet stage for good. Over the last few years the composer’s pieces were employed by such choreographers as James Kudelka in Toronto, Marie Chouinard in Vienna, our own Krzysztof Pastor in Tel Aviv, Christopher Wheeldon in London, Benjamin Millepied in Saint Petersburg, Alexei Ratmansky in London, and Stanton Welch in Paris.
Let us also
mention other important Chopin ballet stagings shown at the Teatr Wielki in Warsaw in the more distant past: Maurice Béjart's Don Juan Variations (1987)
Chopin's Muses - poster (1991)Teatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
Waldemar Wołk-Karaczewski’s Chopin's Muses with Paweł Chynowski’s libretto and a score incorporating both concertos and four other pieces (1991),
Fortepianissimo - poster (1999)Teatr Wielki - Polish National Opera
as well as Lorka Massine’s Fortepianissimo (1999).
Exhibition put together by:
Maja Kluczyńska
Consultant:
Paweł Chynowski
Translated by:
Monika Tacikowska